PESTICIDE EXPOSURE & PREGNANCY

Being in contact with pesticides is harmful, especially during pregnancy. It may lead to miscarriages, preterm births, low birth weight, birth defects and learning problems in children.

Living or working in an area with crops, you may be exposed to large amounts of pesticides. During pregnancy it is very important to avoid being exposed to pesticides.

Taking precautions even when not pregnant is vital, but specially so if you are planning to be, or if you could be. Often pesticide exposure can happen in the first weeks before a woman realizes she’s pregnant and those first weeks are the most dangerous time for exposure.

Pesticides and Reproductive Health

Many pesticides are endocrine disruptors and interfere with the body’s biological signals. Some chemicals pass through the body quickly others are carried through blood and tissue for years. Pesticides are harmful to the reproductive system, sometimes killing cells or damaging cells, resulting in infertility.

Pesticides have also been implicated in miscarriage, premature birth, reduced fertility in both men and women, altered sex ratio (fewer boys being born) and a number of developmental defects.

Research indicates that children exposed to pesticides either in utero, or during other critical periods face significant health risks including higher incidence of:

Birth defects

Neurodevelopmental delays & cognitive impairment

Childhood brain cancers

Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD)

Endocrine disruption

Can Pesticides Harm an Unborn Baby?

All pesticides have some level of toxicity and pose some risk during pregnancy.

The risk depends on the toxicity of the pesticide ingredients and how much of the pesticide you and the baby are exposed to while pregnant. During pregnancy, the baby’s brain, nervous system, and organs are developing rapidly and can be more sensitive to the toxic effects of pesticides. Because of this, it is important to minimize exposure to pesticides during pregnancy.

Early exposures to environmental chemicals can result in subtle changes that affect functioning but are not evident until much later in a child’s development.

These subtle changes that occur during fetal development and in early childhood contribute not only to adverse neurodevelopmental and behavioral changes but also to adult diseases, including obesity and neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer disease. This is why it is important to minimize exposure to potentially toxic chemicals early in a child’s life.

During the first trimester (3 months) of pregnancy, the nervous system is rapidly developing in your baby, so you definitely want to avoid any type of contact with pesticides during this time.

Pesticides and Pregnancy: Agricultural Pesticides & Insecticides

Some studies show that the greatest risk of exposure to pesticides is during the first three to eight weeks of the first trimester when the neural tube (brain) development is occurring. If you discover you are pregnant and you live near an agricultural area where pesticides are being used, it is advised you remove yourself to avoid exposure to these chemicals.

Annals of Oncology, Epidemiology, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, Journal of Neuroscience, Occupational Environmental Medicine, and the American Journal of Public Health are just some of the journals reporting associations between agricultural pesticides and birth defects, pregnancy complications, and miscarriage.

Pesticides and Pregnancy: Domestic Pesticides & Insecticides

Pregnant women should avoid pesticides, whenever possible. There is no substantial evidence that links exposure to pest-control products at levels commonly used at home to pose a risk to the fetus. However, California’s Defects Monitoring Program reports that three out of every four women are exposed to pesticides around the home, therefore fetus is subject to some form of exposure.

They also observed that pregnant women exposed to household gardening pesticides had a modest risk increase for oral clefts, neural tube defects, heart defects, and limb defects. Women living within 1/4 mile of agricultural crops had the same modest risk increase for neural tube defects.

All insecticides are to some extent poisonous and some studies have suggested that high levels of exposure to pesticides may contribute to miscarriage, preterm delivery, and birth defects. Certain pesticides and other chemi­cals, including PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), have weak, estrogen-like (hormone imitating) qualities called endocrine disrupters that some scientists suspect may affect development of the fetus’s reproductive system.

The Environmental Health Perspectives Journal (EHP) Volume 110 reports that children who are exposed to indoor pesticides are at an elevated risk of leukemia. EHP Journal adds that the risk is increased during the first three months of pregnancy and when professional pest control services are used in the home.

Pesticides and Pregnancy: Organic & Natural Pesticides

Almost all toxins used in pesticides are compounds that are naturally present in plants. Although they sound healthier, the terms organic and natural are not synonyms for better or safer.

All chemicals, including natural chemicals, have the potential to cause harm if they are not properly handled.

Make sure you read the warning labels on all pesticide and insecticide packages before handling.

A pregnant woman can reduce her exposure to pesticides by controlling pest problems with less toxic products such as boric acid (use the blue form available at hardware stores).

Helpful Information on Pesticide or Insecticide Use during Pregnancy:

Don’t panic if you realize you have been exposed to a pesticide. Any real risk comes from long-term or intense exposure. If you just treated your dog for fleas and exposed yourself to a pesticide, the risks to your baby are small.

The safest plan is to avoid using pesticides or insecticides in your home, on your pets, or in the garden during pregnancy. Especially avoid them during the first trimester when the baby’s neural tube and nervous system are developing.

If a woman must have her home or property treated with pesticides, a pregnant woman should:

Have someone else apply the chemicals

Leave the area for the amount of time indicated on the package instructions

Remove food, dishes, and utensils from the area before the pesticide is used

Following application of pesticides in the home have someone wash the area where food is prepared

Open the win­dows and allow air flow into the house after pesticides applied

If pesticide use is occurring outdoors or you live in an agricultural area, a pregnant woman should:

Close all windows and turn off air conditioning when pesticides are used outdoors, so fumes do not enter into the house

Wear rubber gloves and protective clothing when working outdoors to pre­vent skin contact with plants that have pesticide or pesticide residue on them